Derek Alderman, a professor of geography at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, has conducted a study on streets named after Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. His research shows that there are more than 900 streets named for Dr. King. The 900 streets are predominantly in the southeastern United States, where much of the civil rights movement took place. There are 10 states in which there are no streets named after Dr. King.

Professor Alderman found that there has been widespread opposition to naming streets after Dr. King in predominantly White areas. “Street names are powerful symbols of identity,” says Dr. Alderman, “and some people are very unwilling to give up that identity. It’s all about protecting space, which can be a racial issue. It’s a protection of racial boundaries and racial power.”

As a result, a great many of the streets named after Dr. King are in predominantly Black neighborhoods. “It’s a bitter irony,” Professor Alderman says. “We’re commemorating a man who battled against segregation by segregating his memory.”

Leave a Reply

Due to incidents of abuse and harassment that have occurred in the past, JBHE will not publish telephone numbers or email addresses of individuals in this space. If you want to contact someone in a particular article, we suggest you contact them directly not in an open forum.

Do you believe that the U.S. Census should continue to ask American citizens to state their race?